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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Up next are the Clipeati and Armati. Clipeati were armored footmen equipped with enormous shields
called pavises. The Clipeati formed a
shield wall from which Hungarian infantry could fight or hide behind. Crossbowmen and
handgunners probably operated behind this shield wall.

It helps to have a large flat surface like these pavises when painting heraldry in 15mm. I used watered down grey or brown to block out the shape of the icon. Then I filled up the base color and worked up successive highlights. When the icon was finished, I highlighted the surrounding color one last time to clean up and bring visual interest. It is a bit of a trial. You want your paints thinned so that you don't get too much build up but then again, too thin and it runs. Images with too much detail just doesn't work in this scale. For example, the severed eagle's leg with an arrow looked great on the web but took forever to paint. Ultimately, it was visually dwarfed by the much simpler egret, goose and goblet heraldry. I should have just painted all white geese on black shields!

I found my heraldry at a Hungarian website. Thanks to Chrome's translator, I was able to click through and find what I needed! I can vouch for the accuracy of the heraldry on the shields above, save one. As I got to the finish line, I decided to have a bit of fun on one pavise. +5 points to the first reader who can spot it!

Armati were the armored footmen who fought with the
Clipeati. It is not clear what the Armati were armed with but it is assumed they used pole arms for fighting from, over and around the
Clipeati pavises. Overall, I'm pleased with how this mix of figures turned out together.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Santa brought me a new Daylight Triple Bright Lamp, Despite the absence of sunlight, I can start taking pictures and posting King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary and his Black Army. This is a major upgrade over the workshop light I've been using. Here's hoping it'll pay dividends with photography and painting in 2013!

I pitched into the Later Hungarian army v2 project wanting to change my painting and basing style. Some speculate that the Black Army was given its moniker based on their black armor panoply. If any readers have an opinion on this point, I'd love to hear it! I experimented with black but as always, straight black in 15mm is a problem visually. I've settled for working black in as much as possible, including the base coat. From foot soldier to knight, armor will be very, very dark.

Archers: I started with a black and white livery but that wasn't working on account of the fur coats. The very fine detail on these Essex figures made dry brushing a challenge. Sharp-eyed readers will note the ballast is a change-up from what I usually use. It's probably a touch too light but with an army composed of 50% cavalry, it'll pay dividends with the 100+ horses in various shades of brown.

Handgunners: When I look at these fellows, I'm thinking "Killer Bees." It doesn't come through in the photos but the yellow triad pops nicely on the tabletop.

Crossbowmen: The camera shows all sins and I see I forgot to put a highlight on the quiver case! D'oh! I do like these Essex poses though.

Next week, I'll post on the heaven and hell that is painting heraldry in 15mm. With persistence and some luck, I managed to find a website with medieval Szekler heraldry.

Friday, December 21, 2012

I've got plenty of Hungarians to post but I also have a 250 watt natural light painting lamp under the Christmas tree. It should improve my miniature photography so forgive me for a non-painting post! I hope you're enjoying the company of family and friends this Christmas season. If you're hosting in-laws, remember to lay in a healthy supply of Winter Ales to get you through. For some of you, only whiskey will do!

Old Man Winter is back and mean as ever. Camped out in Minnesota for the next 5 months, he won't be happy until the lack of sun and cabin fever drives us all over the edge. He showed up this year with a bamboo pole, bragging how he'd taken up martial arts while resting in warmer climates. Vitamin D, don't fail me now!

Old Man Winter or Bacchus? It's hard to tell.

Snowstorms? Ho Hum!Just because Old Man Winter dropped 16" of snow in a day doesn't mean life stops. 15 minutes of shoveling the deck and I was cooking with fire. The free range snowflakes added extra sizzle!

I thought the traditional fetching of the tree might be over, on account of my kids being 16 and 17. Instead, they insisted on it. Next year, my son is off to college and the year after, my daughter as well. It wasn't that long ago that I could beat them at video games!

No trees were harmed in the making of this picture.

The things I have to do to earn a day at the club.

As I hacked away with a candy-cane striped saw, my wife remarked, "A real man would use a double-bladed axe." I think I got dangerously close to displaying plumber's crack in the last photo. Technically speaking, painting is not a Christmas tradition in my house but it is my favorite past time. Being housebound means guilt-free hours at the painting table. No yard work,mowing or garden to tend to! With no lead mountain to fall back on, I was worried about what to paint after the Hungarians. I found a sprawling Saga collection at Bartertown and a few emails later, I've got 200+ figures coming. It looks like it'll be enough to paint 2 Viking and 2 Norman warbands. Score!

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

For my Black Army of Hungary project, I'm changing things up. I've got a system for basing and painting that I use faithfully on every army. This time, I've decided to look for ways to do things differently. Experiment. Change it up. Right out of the gates, I'm having doubts. I've suppressed them by telling myself I can't judge the changes until it all comes together at the finish line. But I judge. And worry. After all, I'm an old dog.

Please lord, don't let the red devil kill me in my sleep.

I've got 100+ foot and 100+ mounted figures to paint. Almost half of the figures have shields. To scratch-paint heraldry on this many shields, I've got to find ways to save time.

Glue Gun: First up is a trick I learned from Lurkio, 15mm modeler and painter extraordinaire. I dug up an old glue gun and I'm hot gluing the cavalry to popsicle sticks. If you've painted Essex horse, you know how much time this'll save. Essex horses are exquisite, my favorite in 15mm, but their bases are easily bent or twisted. That makes it nearly impossible to put a spot of PVA glue down and call it good. The trick with the glue gun is to have the figure in hand and press hard right after the glue goes down. One press and no fiddling to make the bases flat and figures stand up straight.

Army Painter colored primer: Though quite pricey, I grabbed a bunch of Army Painter colored primers which I'll use to full effect. By priming a strip of mounted figures with a variety of browns, black or grey, I'll have eliminated the step of blocking in the primary color of the horse. I'll use a heavy wash over the blocked color and work detail and a highlight in when I paint the tack. The beauty of this technique is that you get shadowing similar to black lining without the difficulty of painting over blackened tack.

Glue Man to Horse: I've always painted riders separately from their mount but this time, I'm gluing the figure to the horse prior to priming to save time. For many poses, Essex has already done this for me! I don't want to work up from a variety of basecoat colors so I'll go over all riders with black. The black shadows the hard-to-paint places between the rider and his mount. And it'll lend itself to a darker effect that I'm looking for in my Black Army.

Since I'm using black on all the riders, I'll paint faces with black plus flesh combo. At 3 feet + viewing , it looks quite good in 15mm.

Army Painter colored primer in action.

Flock it all: I'm also changing up my flocking. I once made the mistake of using too dark a color in my basing, which resulted in my cavalry being swallowed up by the color of the bases. I found a very light colored Woodland Scenic ballast called Buff. It is so light it's kind of freaking me out. I'm going to stick with it because it should pay out with all of the cavalry & the variations of brown I'll use in painting them. I've had to remind myself that the point of basing is to showcase the figures. If the point of the basing was to realistically display ground cover, I'd use the "all green" flocking method. This one has a serious downside if I hate it at the finish line.

Accept feedback: For me, painting is a quiet, solitary experience. Some of you fellows belong to painting clubs and for you, painting is a social event. I've even heard of painters who paint via webcam just to get conversation and feedback as they go. When I mentioned this idea to my family, they thought webcam painting was a little over the top. I should point out that my kids are teens and thus, my very exsistence is a bit of an embarrasment to them!

For now, I'll settle for sharing photos. My friend Gilles already pointed out some of my work was a bit dark. I knew it to be true but I needed to hear it from someone else before going back and redoing highlights a tone higher. In 15mm, as in life, you just can't be subtle!

Monday, December 10, 2012

Closing the book on my Gallic project, I'm compelled to share a True Story (TM) of my youth. It seems like a satisfactory exclamation point to the topic, so here it goes. After graduating from High
School, my friends and I spent our summer nights hanging out before we went our
separate ways. In Phoenix, Arizona, homes often have a swimming pool on account of the oppressive desert heat. Being
teens, we chose to hang out at the house/pool with absentee parents. On this Saturday night,we'd gotten together for a swim party. Us guys were in the pool and the girls were outside of it, hair and makeup neat, paying us no
attention at all. Our ringleader Jim called us boys together in the deep end and
as we tread water, he said softly “On the count of 3, pull off your swimsuits and wave then at the girls!” Off went the countdown, “1, 2…
3!!!” Off came my swimsuit and I waved mine wildly at the girls. Then it hit me, mine was the only one in the air. Before I could comprehend the depths
of the treachery I was about to suffer, I was dunked and held under water while my suit was
ripped from my hand. By the time
I was allowed up for air, Jim was out of the pool with my suit. The rest of the guys followed him, hooting
and hollering as they paraded my swimsuit through the party to a large tree. There they hung it from the lowest branch with great ceremony and insults to my intelligence.

I was
straight as an arrow back then but even an arrow bends when enough pressure
is applied. I swam to the edge of the
pool and panicked. Everyone was laughing at me. They wanted me to beg, no, plead for
my swimsuit back. I knew they wouldn't soon relent. No, they’d drag the joke out and make me suffer. The pressure to act grew with the taunts and staring. I had to put an end to their game. Without fully understanding it at the time, I decided to go Gallic.

Roman dogs, give me back MY swimsuit!!!

In a single motion, I lifted myself up out of the pool. I did not run. I did not trot. I made no attempt to hide my nakedness. I strode calmly through the crowd with my head up and eyes straight ahead. I walked as if I were wearing pants. I knew I could show no
weakness, fear or shame.And it worked.As soon as I was out of the pool,
the laughter and taunts stopped.The crowd watched in stunned silence as I walked to the tree, pulled my suit down and put them on as as if I were dressing in the privacy of my bedroom. This was NOT the way the prank was supposed to play out. Game over. While the long walk is burnished into my memory, I can't remember anything from the rest of that night.

Livy recorded that the Celts of Asia Minor fought naked: "The Insubres and the Boii wore trousers and light
cloaks, but the Gaesatae, in their love of glory and defiant spirit, had thrown
off their garments and taken up their position in front of the whole army naked
and wearing nothing but their arms... The appearance of these naked warriors
was a terrifying spectacle, for they were all men of splendid physique and in
the prime of life."

Once in my lifetime, I too was a terrifying spectacle. Never before or since have I done anything remotely like this. If surrounded, pressed and hounded by my enemies, I know what to do. Show no fear, stand tall and go Gallic! And of course, pants optional!

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

This spring, I painted Mid Republican Roman, Pontic and Gallic armies for Impetus. I finished my Gauls in May and wrapped up the project with a ton of pics. Unfortunately, the pics turned out to be garbage (arg!) so this post went on the back burner until I could reshoot them. Photography is my least favorite part of this hobby but I finally got them lined up and photographed. Here's the first and last muster of my Impetus Gauls before they left for a new home. Boys, we hardly knew ya!

Naked Warriors: These were easy to paint thanks to the great sculpts by Xyston-clearly a fit and trim bunch. While sculpting the hills and cliffs with clay was a messy and slow business, the end results were decent!

Light Cavalry: To my mind, the Impetus method of using one base per unit is genius. Light horse looks like lights, do they not? And you have the space to tell a story.

Medium Cavalry: Looking suitably tough as they descend a hill to loot a camp near you.

Light Chariots: Xyston doesn't do Gallic chariots so I grabbed these from Splintered Light Miniatures. I was very pleased with them, especially the shaggy ponies. Splintered Light is another top miniature modeler.

Javelinmen Skirmishers: In Impetus, a skirmisher base is 20 mm x 80 mm. I doubled these up for the visual effect.

Warriors: 10 bases of warriors. Xyston command packs have some heroic poses and the basing allows these figures to shine.

While Impetus did not catch fire in our group, I don't regret this project for a moment. This was the most fun I've had painting minis to date. I love the spacing and opportunity to tell a story on a single base. I love painting each figure with great care, knowing the basing allows the extra efforts to be seen. I also love the game itself! The only part I didn't care for was my armies sitting in boxes and not seeing the light of day. To that end, I put my unused armies up for sale for an end-of-year reset. Off went my gladiators and all 3 Impetus armies. The upside is:

2 gentlemen in Kansas City will use my Romans and Pontics for a tabletop adaptation of Command and colors.

A gentlemen in Wisconsin will use my Gauls in his Roman v. Barbarian slugfests.

A gentlemen in Kentucky will surprise his club with my gladiators on game night.

I'm getting a commission as well, which means I'm not done painting and basing Impetus.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

To finish the Impetus armies I started last spring, I needed a Gallic and Pontic camp plus Pontic command stands. Here are the results!

Gallic Camp: Seeing as how they're on the move, I think the player who deploys this camp should be allowed to move it across the tabletop each turn! Old Glory driver, Black Hat wagon, Splintered Light dogs and handler, Xyston rider.

Pontic camp: Xyston figures and Baueda tent. Bark from the banks of the Mississippi doubling as rocky terrain. Brent, I'll need a fresh baggie the next time we get together!

Pontic command stands: Xyston Greek command figures.

That wraps up my 15mm Impetus projects once and for all. Next week, I'll explain why all of these fellows moved on to new homes.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Phil at The Rifleman blog gave me the nod for the Liebster Blog award. Phil, thank you sir! If you've never visited The Rifleman, you need to check it out. He does AARs in a way you've never seen before-see his recent Sedan battle report! He also stages drop dead gorgeous armies from throughout history. Phil blogs in both English and French but with Google Chrome and the built in translator, there's no reason to limit yourself to English language blogs.

The cool thing about the Liebster is the chance to recommend 5 blogs. Considering how many I follow and enjoy, it's an almost impossible task but here it goes:

1. The Monkey That Walks: Markus is a member of one of the best gaming clubs in the world, where he gets to play and paint EVERYTHING under the sun! His love of hobby shines through, as does his excellence in painting. Always a fun read.

2. Wilderness of Mirrors: Gilles is another master painter who's always willing to offer advice for painting my 15mm armies. I really appreciate his tutorials as well as his sense of humor! If only I could take a tube under the ocean to visit, I would!

3. Der Feldmarschall: Jason's "This week in Military History" posts are a blast to wade through and frankly, must take hours to collect. His 28mm armies are to die for and when he does a Warhammer post, you'd think you were viewing White Dwarf on line.

4. Sword and Sandal Gaming: Peter's blog is one of the first ever I followed. True to it's name, with an emphasis on ancients and Field of Glory along with Hail Caesar. I've shamelessly used it as a reference for my painting many a time.

5. Tarty's Tin is a visual treat in 28mm. His new blog starts off with a bang and keeps rolling with Impetus armies from the Ancient through Medieval era. Lovely stuff!

There are so very many great bloggers and painters that I haven't scratched the surface. So to save me from scouring the internet, play it forward and recommend 5 more blogs, gentlemen!

Friday, November 16, 2012

The
Royal Banderium were the finest troops in Matthhias Corvinus’ Hungarian Black
Army. They were composed of nobles, exceptional mercenaries and high ranking
members of other bandieras. Inspired by the picture below, I painted the Royal Banderium in black. I did work them up a bit as straight black left them looking like they were primed and waiting for paint.

The Royal Banderium, "Back in Black" version:

I recently had an opportunity to get in on a large Essex Miniature buy. Having sold off my Hungarians over the summer, I was looking for a new medieval army. After studying the Field of Glory army lists, I decided to buy and paint a new Medieval Hungarian army. Yea, that's kind of embarrassing...

What sucked me back down this road are some ideas for painting version 2. True to their name, I plan on using black as a reoccurring color throughout the units. Mind you, I won't paint them all black as that'd be boring. In my mind's eye, this will be a 15th century armored badass meets AC/DC. The Black Army, "Back in Black."

Sunday, November 11, 2012

After seeing my Spanish army convincingly whipped the first time I put them on the table, I had some nagging doubts. I suppressed these by working up a Sertorius' Lusitanians list. This ancient Spanish army allows you two Legionaries and an Inspired Commander. Most importantly, you can take your Medium Foot as drilled.

My Lusitanians were facing Klay's Early Carthaginians. Sertorius proved his worth in the early game with a +2 to my initiative roll. I won initiative and chose Hilly terrain as it suits my Medium and Light Foot army. Most of the terrain landed on Klay's side, forcing him into an unorthodox deployment. His chariots formed on his left wing as that was the only large clearing. His center was composed of Medium Foot in the brush and Heavy Foot deployed in a narrow clearing.

I was very concerned about the heavy chariots with bow. I put a unit of cavalry in a single rank so they could evade and a unit of legionaries to stand the chariots up. To their right, I put scutarii in difficult terrain, where chariots can't operate. If the legionaries could stand, I'd do a 90 degree turn with the scutarii and take the chariots in the flank. Of course, that only works if the legionaries stand!

In the early game, Klay sent his cavalry to threatening my flank. I had no cavalry on my left flank to counter this move so I was sweating. I sent the bulk of my foot straight at the Carthaginians while taking my other legionaries out of the line to respond to the flanking cavalry. As I pushed forward, Sertorius paid dividends with his ability to command a battle line of 6 battlegroups. And I had exactly 6. On the double, men!

At this point, I charged his skirmishers with mine. If Klay stood to meet my charge, our melee would block his troops and allow my main battle line to hit him before he cleared the terrain. If his skirmishers evaded, I'd get 2 turns of missile fire to soften him up before I charged home. Klay chose to evade one unit of skirmishers but stand with a unit of Balearic slingers. This cleverly tied up 2 of my skirmishers, where he could walk up medium and heavy troops into combat. My charge was looking like a mistake.

It was to prove an act of genius as my skirmishers somehow stood firm for 2 full turns of melee against heavy foot, allowing my main line to come up and hit the Carthaginians before they cleared the rough terrain. That meant the Sacred Band was stuck in the rear.

On the other flank, the chariots were having a hard go. My skirmishers were giving a good account against his chariot bowmen, managing to reduce a unit by a base. Klay had me overmatched to his front but he could see my forces waiting on the flanks to beat him should he charge.

Sertorius lead from the front and my Spaniards gave a good account of themselves. They hit and broke a unit of African Spearmen, the Sardinians behind them and finally the traitorous scutarii mercenaries in the Carthaginian 3rd line. The Sacred Band and the flanking cavalry never got into battle.

With the game slipping away, the chariots make a series of charges. Our lines hold up and down the line. When one of the chariots breaks, Carthage hits their army break point. Sertorius wins!

Key to the game was the terrain, which forced the Carthaginians into an unconventional deployment. The heroic stand of the caetrati and slingers in the early game allowed me to hit the Carthaginians before they redeployed beyond the rough terrain. After every game, Klay gives a debriefing and today, he agreed the Sertorius' Lusitanians list is a keeper.